What is the difference between a feverish cold and a cold cold? It is to figure out how to deal with the symptoms. Especially in the case of pediatric colds, there is a lot to be said for the way in which they are handled.
What is the difference between a child's cold and a child's hot? How do you tell the difference?
When it comes to colds and flu, children, especially those who are young and have relatively weak resistance and poor regulation of bodily functions, may catch wind-cold or wind-heat colds if they are a little negligent, which is a health problem that often occurs in children.
Colds, commonly known as colds, are common throughout the year, especially among children in spring and winter. When there is a sudden change in the environment and climate, it affects the regulation of human physiology and causes colds. However, common colds are usually categorized into wind-cold colds and wind-heat colds based on different changes in cold and heat.
Wind-cold flu: low fever, no sweat, cold, clear nose. It mostly occurs in cold seasons, such as winter, late fall or early spring, and is a cold caused by a child's body feeling cold. Wind-cold cold can have low fever, chills, no sweating, headache, muscle pain, clear snot, light cough, no redness or swelling of the throat.
Wind-heat cold: Mostly occurring in the warm weather season, such as late spring, summer and early fall of the climate warming but changeable season, is the child's body to feel the summer wind caused by cold symptoms. Wind-heat colds are characterized by fever, even high fever, excessive sweating, headache, nasal congestion, sore throat, flushed face and red tongue, and rapid pulse.
What is the difference between a wind-cold and a wind-heat cold in a child?Children are wind-cold cold and heat cold, we mainly from the following aspects of the simple difference:
Seasonal difference: generally spring, winter cold is caused by wind-cold cold; summer, autumn season is wind heat cold;
The cause is different: wind-cold cold is mostly tired, cold stimulation and other bodily functions of the dysfunction caused by The most common cause of wind-colds is the imbalance of body functions caused by exertion, stimulation by cold, etc. Wind-heat colds are caused by heatstroke due to the imbalance of heat and constipation, and fire.
Looking at whether there is a sweat: generally the child has a cold but no sweat is more wind cold cold; if the sweat or sweat is wind heat cold.
Accompanying symptoms: low fever (38 ℃ or less), accompanied by headache, joint pain, body aches, most of the wind-cold cold; and sweating, fever or even high fever, mostly wind-heat colds.
Sputum and nasal mucus: Generally, clear and thin nasal mucus and sputum are wind-cold colds; on the contrary, sticky and cloudy nasal mucus and sputum are generally wind-heat colds.